enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Remedial education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remedial_education

    Complete College America, a national non-profit working on remedial education reform, [46] reports that among remedial students at two-year colleges 62% complete their remedial course and 23% complete associated college-level courses in that subject within two years (for example, complete math remediation and the college-level math requirements ...

  3. At-risk students - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/At-risk_students

    An at-risk student is a term used in the United States to describe a student who requires temporary or ongoing intervention in order to succeed academically. [1] At risk students, sometimes referred to as at-risk youth or at-promise youth, [2] are also adolescents who are less likely to transition successfully into adulthood and achieve economic self-sufficiency. [3]

  4. Resource room - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_room

    Special education instructors in a resource room focus on particular goals as mandated by an IEP and remedial general education curriculum. Some programs emphasize the development of executive skills, including homework completion and behavior. [5]

  5. Special education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_education

    For example, a student may be placed into the special education programs due to a mental health condition such as obsessive compulsive disorder, depression, anxiety, panic attacks or ADHD, while the student and his parents believe that the condition is adequately managed through medication and outside therapy. In other cases, students whose ...

  6. Community colleges in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_colleges_in_the...

    Remediation, or sometimes referred to as developmental education, is a format of education aimed to help open doors for students by reinforcing or re-teaching them core skills. This educational strategy is utilized so students can meet competencies in various academic arenas and further progress in their academics.

  7. Compensatory education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compensatory_education

    Numerous programs have been created in order to help children at risk reach their full potential. Among the American programs of compensary education are Head Start, the Chicago Child-Parent Center Program, High/Scope, Abecedarian Early Intervention Project, SMART (Start Making a Reader Today), the Milwaukee Project and the 21st Century Community Learning Center.

  8. Mainstreaming (education) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mainstreaming_(education)

    The new focus of special education was to align it with the national educational goal and that was to nurture individuals to succeed as laborers and socialists. Medicine was taking a leap with a new perspective about remedial education and deficit compensation and focused on the rehabilitation of students' psychological and physiological deficits.

  9. Response to Intervention - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Response_to_Intervention

    In education, Response to Intervention (RTI or RtI) is an academic approach used to provide early, systematic, and appropriately intensive supplemental instruction and support to children who are at risk of or currently performing below grade or age level standards.